THE NEW YOR.KER. through friends in the Washington press corps who write about military and foreign affairs. Barnett invited Rostow to join his board. In accepting, the former Un- der-Secretary of State noted that "our new Committee on the Present Dan- ger, of which you will be an actIve member, is planning a comparable op- eration," and added, "It should be no problem to coordinate our activities and indeed to act jointly on many is- sues. " Within four years, the committee o; _ fought three major battles with the pro-detente forces in two Administra- tions, and in the process helped to change dramatically the views that Americans held about the Russians and about themselves. The first battle began within weeks of the committee's founding meeting. President Ford, who was under attack from Ronald Reagan in the Republican primaries, approved the appointment of seven outside experts to go over the C.I.A's intelligence data on the Soviet Union. This group-military and academic specialists who were selected for their "more sombre vIews" of the Soviet threat-quickly became known as Team B. The President's Foreign In- telligence Advisory Board, which had sixteen members, six of whom were the original members of the Commit- tee on the Present Danger, had recom- mended such an outside evaluation a year earlier. The National Intelli- gence Estimate of Soviet military strength-an annual assessment com- piled by the C.I.A. and the rest of the government's intelligence agencies- had been under attack for being com- placent about the Russians. In a study of previous projections of Soviet strate- gic capabilities made in 1973, Profes- sor Albert W ohlstetter, now a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution, had concluded that forty-nine of fifty-one projections made over a twelve-year period had turned out to be underesti- mates. (There had been some highly influential overestimates, however, in- cluding Paul Nitze's erroneous predic- tion that the year 1954, because of the Soviet military buildup, would be "the year of maximum danger," and the AIr Force's alarmist projection of So- viet mIssile production, which was the basis of John Kennedy's equally mis- leading "missile gap" rhetoric in the 1960 campaign. In both cases, the gaps existed but were heavily in favor of the United States.) In February of 1978, a report of the Senate Select Committee on Intelli- 99 GENÈVE \ r- -;K" ("' "11 f t , . \ <: "'!ø · , q t;iÎ " 1 P" 1 . tl" ...... / , ,. X", . . I '} ;s w / -....... , /" c Æ I .... /., 1 . . {f ,. ' .::: ./ ..' -- Two quartz designs from a distinguIshed sports collection in18K gold; steel, and gold and steel. . AT NEIMAN-MARCUS Dallas FortWorth, Houston, Bal Harbor, Atlanta. Sl louIs. Washîngton. 0 C . Chicago; Beverly HH1s Newport Beach White Plams Las Vegas Its chrome or polished brass case folds to a sJlm %" for travel Inside, an in- credible quartz movement is accurate to 5-seconds per month Big LCD numerals are easily read and when It'S time to rise the alarm chirps Instead of '/. 1'.: .' ... : é- fJ :/ Give someone an alarm clock with two faces. One tells time, the other says "Good Morning." 7' / :: '7, .";::. . / { .:f:" : '1 7,. V: ,tj $fi.-r..:, r 1>J! .' ':''31>. y kf. '., ,.' o GMF" .. "$ "- m "' < 'tt'" , 11 / / / -j .' ii".. / ;s. buzzing This makes our LCD Alarm worth far more than the suggested $39 95 <!i X Howard Miller Clock Co. Zeeland Michigan 49464 ø .. f-:':.. " f/ .. í f :"., " /, {.. ",#'- 'i f 4/'::>/" --:.. -- I ./ //i' ...::::- . : ::: 0". ' , ::.:..;: .:";.;:: ..w 111 "'" '/ ; '" "*'":-.- --- , . ..> -. . Availab'le at BloortÍingdale $ - f\.J'ew',Y6rk,Clock Shop of Vienna,- Viemna. VA, Clock Shop 11 ..... Rockvme T MD.. Marshall Field ...... AU Stores, John Wanamaker -'- Ph Itadelpht8. Woodward & Lothrop - Washmgton 0 C _..,